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Media Players for Windows Without DRM?

jasonmicron asks: "I am curious as to what you Linux/UNIX people use for a media player that supports both license lookup on the internet and DVD Playback support. I am quite sick of Microsoft's media player telling me that my 'license is invalid', even on DVDs that I own. I find that VERY lame. I ask because not only does Microsoft tell me that my license is invalid but Real Network's Real Player tells me the same thing (even though I place my totally VALID and self-owned DVD in my DVD-ROM player in my DVD-ROM, which runs on Windows). What media players does Slashdot recommend to bypass the total ignorance of Microsoft and Real Networks? I am looking for a Windows solution, though any Linux / UNIX solution is completely welcome."

3 of 85 comments (clear)

  1. Mplayer32 by Omniscientist · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The 32 bit binary of mplayer will be all that you need. The 64 bit version of mplayer will lack some important windows/quicktime codecs, but you probably aren't worried about that.

    Mplayer is available for a multitude of platforms, including Windows, Mac OS X, and *nix. In fact my girlfriend uses mplayer and mplayer only on her Mac OS X due to Quicktime being unable to play a large amount of movies.
    Of course if you want dvd playback you will need libdvdcss, libdvdread, etc.
    Get mplayer here.

  2. Most like its not DRM by Utopia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Your time-limited DVD playback software has probably expired.
    Media Player by itself will not display 'license is invalid' message for normal DVD playback.

    You just need to buy a new DVD decoder.
    NVidia PureVideo Decoder or WinDVD are some of the best around.

    1. Re:Most like its not DRM by rmjohnso · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think the parent commentor is on the right track here. Windows Media Player and Real Player CANNOT natively decode DVDs. They require a licensed decoder in the background. WMP and RP just are different looks to the same decoder.

      For example, you can install WinDVD and have WMP or RP use the WinDVD decoding to play back DVDs. I'm not sure why anyone would want to do this, but that's just me. Remember, you USUALLY have to pay for a decoder, so the software maker can pay the monolithic MPAA for the CSS keys.

      As for Linux programs, see the other comments about MPlayer, VLC, Xine, etc.

      --
      "Extremism in the pursuit of liberty is no vice. Moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue." --Barry Goldwater